The results of celestial observation in antiquity seem extraordinary when we consider that they were obtained with the naked eye. Eratosthenes estimated the Earth's circumference from the different lengths of the shadows cast by the Sun in Alexandria and Cyrene. Hipparchus of Nicaea, comparing the apparent dimensions of the Moon with the dimensions of the Earth's shadow, arrived at a reasonable approximation of the distance of the Moon. Ptolemy catalogued the precise positions of 1,025 fixed stars. With the naked eye and the help of large mural quadrants or the triquetrum, astronomers made observations to record the changes in the Sun's altitude during the year. Using armillary instruments, large sextants, and altazimuth quadrants, they measured the coordinates of the planets to describe their movements along the zodiac and, later, their orbits in space. Thanks to geometric methods for resolving spherical triangles, astronomers used the angular distances between stars to identify their relative positions with ever greater accuracy. This allowed the production of superb maps and celestial planispheres.
Inv. 1094
Gualterus Arsenius [attr.], Flemish, ca. 1570
Inv. 1097
Johann Richter (Praetorius), Altdorf, 1591
Inv. 1098
Gerard Mercator [attr.], Duisburg, ca. 1570
Inv. 1103
Gualterus Arsenius, Louvain, 1572
Inv. 3361
Egnazio Danti or Giovanni Battista Giusti [attr.], Florence, 16th cent.
Inv. 1100
Maker unknown, English?, late 16th cent.
Inv. 2505
Maker unknown, 17th cent.
Inv. 1289bis
Maker unknown, Florence?, 17th cent.
Inv. 3167
Christoph Schissler [attr.], German, late 16th cent.
Inv. 3167
Christoph Schissler [attr.], German, late 16th cent.
Inv. 120
Maker unknown, Italian?, 16th cent.
Inv. 1096
Hans Dorn [attr.], German, 1483
Inv. 1285
Maker unknown, Italian, 1568
Inv. 1105
Muhammad 'Ibn Abi'l Qasim 'Ibn Bakran, Arab, 1102-1103
Inv. 1289
Vincenzo Viviani [attr.], Italian, 1645
Inv. 1282
Maker unknown, German, 16th cent.
Inv. 1106
Maker unknown, German?, 16th cent.
Inv. 1107
Maker unknown, French?, 13th cent.
Inv. 1114
Christoph Schissler, Augsburg, 1560
Inv. 1111
Georg Hartmann, Nuremberg, 1545